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Dive into the research topics where Louise Kirman is active.

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Featured researches published by Louise Kirman.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Investigation of Functionally Liver Selective Glucokinase Activators for the Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes

Gregory Raymond Bebernitz; Valerie Beaulieu; Bethany A. Dale; Richard Deacon; Alokesh Duttaroy; Jiaping Gao; Melissa S. Grondine; Ramesh Chandra Gupta; Mesut Kakmak; Michael Kavana; Louise Kirman; Jinsheng Liang; Wieslawa M. Maniara; Siralee Munshi; Sunil Sadanand Nadkarni; Herbert F. Schuster; Travis Stams; Irene St. Denny; Paul Taslimi; Brian Edward Vash; Shari L. Caplan

Type 2 diabetes is a polygenic disease which afflicts nearly 200 million people worldwide and is expected to increase to near epidemic levels over the next 10-15 years. Glucokinase (GK) activators are currently under investigation by a number of pharmaceutical companies with only a few reaching early clinical evaluation. A GK activator has the promise of potentially affecting both the beta-cells of the pancreas, by improving glucose sensitive insulin secretion, as well as the liver, by reducing uncontrolled glucose output and restoring post-prandial glucose uptake and storage as glycogen. Herein, we report our efforts on a sulfonamide chemotype with the aim to generate liver selective GK activators which culminated in the discovery of 3-cyclopentyl-N-(5-methoxy-thiazolo[5,4-b]pyridin-2-yl)-2-[4-(4-methyl-piperazine-1-sulfonyl)-phenyl]-propionamide (17c). This compound activated the GK enzyme (alphaK(a) = 39 nM) in vitro at low nanomolar concentrations and significantly reduced glucose levels during an oral glucose tolerance test in normal mice.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2012

Development of isoform selective PI3-kinase inhibitors as pharmacological tools for elucidating the PI3K pathway

Ian Bruce; Mohammed Akhlaq; Graham Charles Bloomfield; Emma Budd; Brian Cox; Bernard Cuenoud; Peter Finan; Peter Gedeck; Julia Hatto; Judy Hayler; Denise Head; Thomas H. Keller; Louise Kirman; Catherine Leblanc; Darren Le Grand; Clive Mccarthy; Desmond O’Connor; Charles Owen; Mrinalini Sachin Oza; Gaynor Elizabeth Pilgrim; Nicola Press; Lilya Sviridenko; Lewis Whitehead

Using a parallel synthesis approach to target a non-conserved region of the PI3K catalytic domain a pan-PI3K inhibitor 1 was elaborated to provide alpha, delta and gamma isoform selective Class I PI3K inhibitors 21, 24, 26 and 27. The compounds had good cellular activity and were selective against protein kinases and other members of the PI3K superfamily including mTOR and DNA-PK.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Avoidance of the Ames test liability for aryl-amines via computation.

Patrick McCarren; Gregory Raymond Bebernitz; Peter Gedeck; Susanne Glowienke; Melissa S. Grondine; Louise Kirman; Jacob Klickstein; Herbert F. Schuster; Lewis Whitehead

Aryl-amines are commonly used synthons in modern drug discovery, however a minority of these chemical templates have the potential to cause toxicity through mutagenicity. The toxicity mostly arises through a series of metabolic steps leading to a reactive electrophilic nitrenium cation intermediate that reacts with DNA nucleotides causing mutation. Highly detailed in silico calculations of the energetics of chemical reactions involved in the metabolic formation of nitrenium cations have been performed. This allowed a critical assessment of the accuracy and reliability of using a theoretical formation energy of the DNA-reactive nitrenium intermediate to correlate with the Ames test response. This study contains the largest data set reported to date, and presents the in silico calculations versus the in vitro Ames response data in the form of beanplots commonly used in statistical analysis. A comparison of this quantum mechanical approach to QSAR and knowledge-based methods is also reported, as well as the calculated formation energies of nitrenium ions for thousands of commercially available aryl-amines generated as a watch-list for medicinal chemists in their synthetic optimization strategies.


Archive | 2003

5-phenylthiazole derivatives and use as pi3 kinase inhibitors

Ian Bruce; Peter Finan; Catherine Leblanc; Clive Mccarthy; Lewis Whitehead; Nicola Press; Graham Charles Bloomfield; Judy Hayler; Louise Kirman; Mrinalini Sachin Oza; Lena Shukla


Archive | 2006

Sulfonamide derivatives as glycokinase activators useful in the treatment of type 2 diabetes

Gregory Raymond Bebernitz; Louise Kirman


Archive | 2004

5-Phenylthiazole derivatives and their use as p13 kinase inhibitors

Graham Charles Bloomfield; Ian Bruce; Catherine Leblanc; Mrinalini Sachin Oza; Lewis Whithead; Bernard Cuenoud; Thomas H. Keller; Louise Kirman; Clive Mccarthy; Gaynor Elizabeth Woodward


Archive | 2007

Thiadiazolidinone inhibitors of ptpase

Alan D. Neubert; David Barnes; Young-Shin Kwak; Katsumasa Nakajima; Gregory Raymond Bebernitz; Gary Mark Coppola; Louise Kirman; Michael H. Serrano-Wu; Travis Stams; Sidney Wolf Topiol; Thalaththani Ralalage Vedananda; James R. Wareing


Archive | 2011

BICYCLIC ACETYL-COA CARBOXYLASE INHIBITORS

David Barnes; Gregory Raymond Bebernitz; Kevin B. Clairmont; Scott Louis Cohen; Robert E. Damon; Robert Francis Day; Stephanie Kay Dodd; Christoph Gaul; Efthymiou Hatice Belgin Gulgeze; Monish Jain; Rajeshri Ganesh Karki; Louise Kirman; Kai Lin; Justin Yik Ching Mao; Tajesh Jayprakash Patel; Brian Kenneth Raymer; Liansheng Su


Archive | 2010

Cyclohexane derivatives as inhibitors of acetyl-coa carboxylase (acc)

David Barnes; Gregory Raymond Bebernitz; Scott Louis Cohen; Robert E. Damon; Robert Francis Day; Monish Jain; Rajeshri Ganesh Karki; Louise Kirman; Tajesh Jayprakash Patel; Brian Kenneth Raymer; Herbert F. Schuster; Wei Zhang


Archive | 2015

Fatty acids and their use in conjugation to biomolecules

David Barnes; Ken Yamada; Chikwendu Ibebunjo; Alokesh Duttaroy; Louise Kirman; Alexandra Marshall Bruce; Aimee Richardson Usera; Frédéric Zecri; Jun Yuan; Changgang Lou; Aaron Kanter; Avirup Bose

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